NewsJanuary 30, 2009

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Gov. Jay Nixon ventured to the University of Missouri's flagship campus Thursday to tout a proposed expansion of health-care training for college students. He instead spent much of his time defending a decision announced a day earlier to suspend several college construction projects funded with money from Missouri's student loan authority. Among the projects: $31.2 million toward replacement of the 70-year-old Ellis Fischel Cancer Center in Columbia...

By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER ~ The Associated Press

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Gov. Jay Nixon ventured to the University of Missouri's flagship campus Thursday to tout a proposed expansion of health-care training for college students.

He instead spent much of his time defending a decision announced a day earlier to suspend several college construction projects funded with money from Missouri's student loan authority. Among the projects: $31.2 million toward replacement of the 70-year-old Ellis Fischel Cancer Center in Columbia.

The college building program -- started by former Republican governor Matt Blunt -- depends on the receipt of $350 million over several years from the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority. The loan agency has paid $242 million to the state since fall 2007, but has delayed several quarterly payments because of financial troubles caused by the credit market crunch and changes in federal student loan laws.

Nixon expressed doubt that the loan authority could pay the rest of the money due the state.

"That's $100 million that's not in the bank," Nixon told an audience of students, faculty, administrators and Columbia campus Chancellor Brady Deaton at a Sinclair School of Nursing news conference. "MOHELA did not make its payments anywhere near the numbers they said they would.

"I'm not going to stand in front of the people of Missouri and promise something from a bank account that doesn't have something in it. That money doesn't exist," the Democratic governor said.

Republican Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder responded later Thursday by suggesting Nixon should let the construction projects continue for several more months and then plug whatever shortfall exists with money from the expected federal economic stimulus package.

By halting the projects now, Kinder said the governor was unnecessarily laying off workers and harming the private companies that have contracts with universities. Kinder gave reporters an e-mail from a University of Central Missouri official stating that 43 people would have to stop work as a result of Nixon's decision to halt funding for the renovation of two buildings at the Warrensburg campus.

"These projects are worthy projects that will create jobs in the short term and over the long term, and the economy will truly be stimulated, as opposed to this bogus, porkulous stimulus fraud coming out of Washington, D.C.," Kinder said.

Reaction to Nixon's decision took away much of the luster from what had been intended as a celebratory news conference.

Surrounded by nearly 50 female nursing students in black scrubs and several mannequins posing as bedridden hospital patients, Nixon pushed his $39.8 million "Caring for Missourians" proposal as an immediate boost to the state's economy. It would allow schools limited by space and staff shortages to graduate more than 900 new nurses, dentists, physical therapists and medical technology specialists.

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At the Columbia campus alone, the nursing school turns away more than 150 applicants each year because of its limited faculty and classroom size, said Roxanne McDaniel, associate dean of nursing.

About $6.5 million of the extra money would go to Linn State Technical College and other two-year schools. Among four-year schools, the University of Missouri-Kansas City would receive the largest share, $11.7 million.

Blunt pushed a proposal last year with a moniker -- "Preparing to Care" -- that was nearly identical to the new Nixon measure, but legislative budget writers removed it entirely. Nixon said he expects a different result this time. He noted that Blunt's proposal was just a fraction of the $38 million initially sought by Gordon Lamb, the Missouri system's interim president at the time.

"This doesn't require multimillion dollar tax credit deals to lure in folks," Nixon said. "We've got the brains and the bodies here. We just need to put a little more structure and support around the system we have."

In addition to the Columbia cancer center, three more of the remaining 30 construction projects outlined in Blunt's Lewis and Clark Discovery Initiative have been suspended indefinitely: a $5 million plant science building in Mexico, Mo.; a $600,000 swine research facility in Callaway County; and a $4.5 million business center at Southeast Missouri State University in Cape Girardeau.

Nixon said Thursday that those projects where "crews are already on the ground working" will not be halted.

"We will finish the projects that are in the middle of construction," he said.

House Speaker Ron Richard, R-Joplin, called the MOHELA cuts a "bad idea" that will leave colleges scrambling to reverse decisions made with the expectation the state would deliver construction money.

"That's a promise we made," he said.

Before the news conference, Nixon huddled privately with Deaton and several other high-level university administrators. Deaton said afterward that he remains heartened by the new governor's commitment to public higher education -- especially a pledge to not trim the budgets of the state's colleges and universities in exchange for their commitment to not raise tuition next year.

"The university has been treated very fairly," Deaton said.

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